Department of Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering, North, Carolina State University, Campus Box 7908, Raleigh, NC 27695-7908, USA.
Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, North Carolina State University, Campus Box 7625, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA.
Water Res. 2015 Oct 15;83:310-8. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2015.06.031. Epub 2015 Jun 23.
Alternative disinfection sources such as ultraviolet light (UV) are being pursued to inactivate pathogenic microorganisms such as Cryptosporidium and Giardia, while simultaneously reducing the risk of exposure to carcinogenic disinfection by-products (DBPs) in drinking water. UV-LEDs offer a UV disinfecting source that do not contain mercury, have the potential for long lifetimes, are robust, and have a high degree of design flexibility. However, the increased flexibility in design options will add a substantial level of complexity when developing a UV-LED reactor, particularly with regards to reactor shape, size, spatial orientation of light, and germicidal emission wavelength. Anticipating that LEDs are the future of UV disinfection, new methods are needed for designing such reactors. In this research study, the evaluation of a new design paradigm using a point-of-use UV-LED disinfection reactor has been performed. ModeFrontier, a numerical optimization platform, was coupled with COMSOL Multi-physics, a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software package, to generate an optimized UV-LED continuous flow reactor. Three optimality conditions were considered: 1) single objective analysis minimizing input supply power while achieving at least (2.0) log10 inactivation of Escherichia coli ATCC 11229; and 2) two multi-objective analyses (one of which maximized the log10 inactivation of E. coli ATCC 11229 and minimized the supply power). All tests were completed at a flow rate of 109 mL/min and 92% UVT (measured at 254 nm). The numerical solution for the first objective was validated experimentally using biodosimetry. The optimal design predictions displayed good agreement with the experimental data and contained several non-intuitive features, particularly with the UV-LED spatial arrangement, where the lights were unevenly populated throughout the reactor. The optimal designs may not have been developed from experienced designers due to the increased degrees of freedom offered by using UV-LEDs. The results of this study revealed that the coupled optimization routine with CFD was effective at significantly decreasing the engineer's design decision space and finding a potentially near-optimal UV-LED reactor solution.
替代消毒源,如紫外线 (UV),正在被研究用于灭活致病微生物,如隐孢子虫和贾第鞭毛虫,同时降低饮用水中致癌消毒副产物 (DBP) 暴露的风险。UV-LED 提供了一种不含汞的紫外线消毒源,具有潜在的长寿命、坚固耐用和高度设计灵活性。然而,在设计 UV-LED 反应器时,设计选项的灵活性增加将增加相当大的复杂性,特别是在反应器形状、尺寸、光的空间取向和杀菌发射波长方面。预计 LED 将成为紫外线消毒的未来,因此需要新的方法来设计此类反应器。在这项研究中,使用即用型 UV-LED 消毒反应器评估了一种新的设计范例。ModeFrontier 是一个数值优化平台,与 COMSOL Multiphysics 耦合,这是一种计算流体动力学 (CFD) 软件包,用于生成优化的 UV-LED 连续流动反应器。考虑了三种最优条件:1)单一目标分析,在实现大肠杆菌 ATCC 11229 至少 (2.0) log10 灭活的同时,最小化输入电源;2)两种多目标分析(其中一种最大化大肠杆菌 ATCC 11229 的 log10 灭活,最小化电源)。所有测试均在 109 mL/min 和 92% UVT(在 254nm 处测量)的流速下完成。第一个目标的数值解通过生物剂量测定法进行了实验验证。优化设计的预测与实验数据吻合良好,并且具有一些非直观的特征,特别是在 UV-LED 空间布置方面,其中灯在整个反应器中不均匀分布。由于使用 UV-LED 提供了更多的自由度,因此优化设计可能不是由有经验的设计师开发的。这项研究的结果表明,结合 CFD 的耦合优化例程可有效显著减小工程师的设计决策空间,并找到潜在的近优 UV-LED 反应器解决方案。